Paid family leave is a critical component of reproductive freedom, and everyone deserves the dignity and financial stability that it offers. Without it, mothers don’t have the time needed to heal from childbirth, and families don’t have time to bond with their new babies; families may face greater challenges in creating stable and nurturing homes for their children; and working people sometimes must risk their livelihoods to care for sick or injured family members.

Paid family leave is inextricably linked to economic opportunity. When parents are forced to abandon caring for their children or relatives for a paycheck, the whole family suffers.

And yet the United States is one of only two nations in the world that does not guarantee paid family leave for working men and women.1

Current law is woefully inadequate. The Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 requires larger employers to allow a new parent up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave after the birth of a child. That means the law only guarantees that new parents can take time off from work if they can afford to do so.

This leaves nearly half of working women without job protection if they choose to start or grow a family.2 Further, the law doesn’t protect working people at companies with fewer than 50 employees, leaving millions of Americans without adequate workplace protections.

All parents, including those who adopt, deserve quality time to nurture their children and care for their family members without the fear of financial instability. A paid family leave program will stop employers from denying new parents that precious time and will provide all families with the dignity of paid time off to care for loved ones.